Top Banner
Web 2.0 Hosting the Conversation
48
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 2.0

Hosting the Conversation

Page 2: Web 2.0 An Introduction

The World in Which we Live

The Consumer is in Control

Page 3: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Consumers have unlimited options

Page 4: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Consumers are avoiding advertising

Pop-up Blocker

Page 5: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Some are revolting against it

Page 6: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Consumers are Online

Page 7: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 8: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 9: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Consumers are going to the web

What are they finding?

Page 10: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 1.0

Company to Consumer: Shut up & listenConsumer to company: Is anyone there?

Page 11: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 1.0

• One-way communication• Pretty postcards• “brochure-ware”• Internet is just another channel• “Corporate-speak”

Page 12: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 1.0• People want human

interaction• The Internet is NOT just

another channel for broadcasting

• The conversation went elsewhere

Page 13: Web 2.0 An Introduction

If Web 1.0 is dead…

…what is Web 2.0?

Page 14: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 2.0 – three facets

• Design• Open source• Communications

Page 15: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 2.0 Design

Customers want a rich user experience

Page 16: Web 2.0 An Introduction

MINIUSA.com

Page 17: Web 2.0 An Introduction

comeclean.com

Page 18: Web 2.0 An Introduction

nike.com/nikeplus

Page 19: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 2.0 Open Source

If you want to get, you gotta give

Page 20: Web 2.0 An Introduction

aws.amazon.com

Page 21: Web 2.0 An Introduction

code.google.com

Page 22: Web 2.0 An Introduction

RSS

Page 23: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 24: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 25: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Web 2.0 Communication

Who will host the conversation?

Page 26: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Markets are Conversations

Companies must:• Pay attention• Participate

Page 27: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Who do consumers trust?

• CEO or Secretary?• Marketing or peer?

“a person like me”i.e. other consumers

Page 28: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Social Media put Consumers in Control of the conversation

Every consumer is…

Page 29: Web 2.0 An Introduction

… a publisher

Page 30: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…a DJ

Page 31: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…an expert

Page 32: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…a broadcaster

Page 33: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…an editor

Page 34: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…a network

Page 35: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…a critic

Page 36: Web 2.0 An Introduction

…syndicated

Page 37: Web 2.0 An Introduction

If institutions want to participate in this

conversation, they must acknowledge and facilitate

consumer control.

Page 38: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Changing MSM

The mainstream media are opening their sites to citizen

journalism

Page 39: Web 2.0 An Introduction

ushare.keloland.com/ushare

Page 40: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 41: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Changing Companies

Companies are creating what are essentially online

databases that capture user generated content

Page 42: Web 2.0 An Introduction

amazon.com

Page 43: Web 2.0 An Introduction

ebay.com

Page 44: Web 2.0 An Introduction

musicdownloads.walmart.com

Page 45: Web 2.0 An Introduction
Page 46: Web 2.0 An Introduction

Thank You

Nathan SchockDirector of Public

RelationsBreukelman Kubista

Groupfreshglue.com

myspace.com/nschocklinkedin.com/in/nschock

AIM: natjoschockSkype: nathanschock

Page 47: Web 2.0 An Introduction

References• Slide #4: tivo.com, toolbar.google.com, xmradio.com, donotcall.gov• Slide #5: adbusters.org, nologo.org. Hat tip to Piers Fawkes, PSFK

(www.psfk.com/branded_utility_psfk_13nov06.pdf)• Slide #6: Pew Internet & the American Life Project

(www.pewinternet.org/trends/Internet_Adoption_4.26.06.pdf)• Slide # 7, 8: Morgan Stanley, Mary Meeker & David Joseph

(www.morganstanley.com/institutional/techresearch/pdfs/Webtwopto2006.pdf)• Slide #16: MINIUSA.com. Hat tip to David Armano, Logic + Emotion, and Kevin Mullet,

Macromedia Experience Design Team, The Essence of Effective Rich Internet Applications (http://darmano.typepad.com/for_blog/essence_of_ria.pdf).

• Slide #17: comeclean.com• Slide #18: nike.com/nikeplus• Slide #20: aws.amazon.com• Slide #21: code.google.com• Slide #22: feedicons.com• Slide #23: bloglines.com• Slide #24: my.yahoo.com

Page 48: Web 2.0 An Introduction

References• Slide #26: Cluetrain Manifesto (cluetrain.com)• Slide #27: Edelman 2006 Annual Trust Barometer

(edelman.com/image/insights/content/FullSupplement_final.pdf).• Slide #29: blogger.com, typepad.com, wordpress.org, spaces.live.com• Slide #30: podcast.net, apple.com/itunes, music.podshow.com, apple.com/ipod• Slide #31: wikipedia.org• Slide #32: youtube.com• Slide #33: digg.com• Slide #34: myspace.com/nschock• Slide #35, 42: amazon.com• Slide #39: ushare/keloland.com/ushare• Slide #40: argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=COMMUNITYPUB• Slide #43: ebay.com• Slide #44: musicdownloads.walmart.com• Slide #45: music.yahoo.com